195 results on '"socioeconomic effects"'
Search Results
2. Assessing the socioeconomic challenges of graduate unemployment on the community: the case of Sekela Woreda, Ethiopia
- Author
-
Abie Assres Fenta
- Subjects
Community ,family ,socioeconomic effects ,unemployment ,Komalsingh Rambaree, Social Work and Criminology, University of Gävle, Gävle, Sweden ,Environmental Economics ,Family, Child & Social Welfare Law ,Education ,Sociology ,Sociology of the Family ,Sociology of Work & Industry ,Criminology and Criminal Justice ,Social Sciences - Abstract
AbstractUnemployment, particularly graduate unemployment, brings a huge impact on the community. Thus, the fundamental purpose of the study was to examine the socioeconomic challenges of graduate unemployment in the community. To do this, descriptive research with a cross-sectional design was used to reckon the socioeconomic challenges of graduate unemployment in the community, and a mixed research approach was employed. Accordingly, 279 survey respondents, 6 unemployed graduates, 5 parents of job seekers for the interview, six discussants, and 3 key informants were selected by employed stratified, simple random, and purposive sampling methods. The data which are obtained from survey questionnaires were analyzed through descriptive statistics, while qualitative data were analyzed by narration and thematic. Hereof, the findings depict that families of jobseekers and their community members have faced economic and social-related troubles. Thus, it brings economic bankruptcy, family strain, menanced for social security, and young students have low interest in education because of the presence of graduate unemployment.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Fatal landslides in Kencho, Shacha & Gozdi villages, Gofa zone, Ethiopia: A detailed investigation (Geological, Geotechnical, geophysical & geospatial) of the July 22, 2024 catastrophe and its socioeconomic repercussions
- Author
-
Leulalem Shano, Bisirat Gisila, Wondwosen Jerene, Desta Ekaso, Tigabu Baye, Tariku Degife, Geberemedin Chameno, Zeleke Dosa, and Muralitharan Jothimani
- Subjects
Landslide susceptibility ,Gezie gofa ,Ethiopia ,Socioeconomic effects ,Heavy rainfall trigger ,GIS modeling ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
A landslide is one of the geological hazards that cause the most disaster in densely populated areas. The landslide that occurred in Gezie Gofa woreda, Gofa Zone, Kencho Shacha Gozdi village, killed more than 250 people. Two landslides occurred on July 22, 2024, at 8:30 and 10:40 AM The first landslide killed six people and demolished three houses. The second landslide killed more than 245 people, including those who came to the site to excavate the buried bodies during the first landslide. The primary objective of this research is to evaluate the landslide causative factors, model the landslide susceptibility, and characterize the landslide disaster on socioeconomic effects that occurred on July 22, 2024. The landslide inventory data, field surveys, laboratory analyses, and various geophysical surveys characterized the current and past landslides of the area. The landslide susceptibility model was modeled using a statistical approach in the GIS. environment. The socioeconomic effects were assessed using field surveys and systematic interviews with the victims. The conditioning factors selected for landslide susceptibility modeling are lithology, geological structures, groundwater, slope, land use or land cover, aspect, curvature, and elevation. The major triggering factor of the landslide in the area was heavy rainfall, which occurred on July 21–22, 2024, between 3:00 a.m.-8:30 a.m. The results reveal that the significant conditioning factors of the landslide in the study area are geological structures (both visible and inferred), groundwater, slopes, and human activities. The characterized socioeconomic effects include the destruction of agricultural land, the demolishing of houses, and the loss of human lives, as well as several people evacuated and sheltered under tents and churches. However, the most momentous disaster in the area is the loss of human life. Based on the research results, it would be better to relocate those people living in the high landslide susceptible zones, and all high landslide-prone areas and mountainous terrain in southern Ethiopia should be mapped, and the people should be aware of the landslide risk areas.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Efectos socioeconómicos de la inserción de Sudamérica en las cadenas de valor. Evidencias sobre el empleo, la informalidad, la educación y el género.
- Author
-
Roitbarg, Hernán
- Subjects
SOCIOECONOMICS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,VALUE chains ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,GENDER ,PARTICIPATION - Abstract
Copyright of Realidad Economica is the property of Realidad Economica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
5. Assessment of the Social Effectiveness of the Project for Development of Innovative Infrastructure on Russky Island.
- Author
-
Kuznetsov, M. E.
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to scientifically substantiate an integrated methodology for assessing the socioeconomic efficiency of integrated investment projects (IIP) based on the principles of sustainable development and international approaches to assessment with a case study of IIP for creating innovative infrastructure in the Far Eastern Federal District (FEFD) of Russia. The object of the study is complex investment projects for the development of innovative infrastructure, implemented in the FEFD. The subject of the study is a set of forecast socioeconomic effects and consequences of implementing the IIP for the development of innovation infrastructure in the FEFD. The article discusses the main directions and instruments of state policy to support IIP in the FEFD, as well as approaches to evaluating such projects. The features and problems of methodological support for assessing the social (economic) efficiency of IIP are revealed. The scientific novelty of the research is the following: existing domestic and foreign methodological approaches to achieving the goal set in it were adapted, the corresponding tools were modified, and experimental calculations were performed with a case study of the project of the Russky innovative scientific and technological center, making it possible to obtain quantitative estimates of the social effectiveness of the project in the context of types of generated effects. The results of the study will make it possible to improve the validity of decisions on implementing budget investments and provision of state support measures for individual projects; they will form a systemic basis for prioritizing a portfolio of existing and future projects (reorienting state support to projects with maximum social impact) and will contribute to improving the structure of initiated projects in favor of more socially effective options for their implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Socio-economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Overseas Filipino Workers and their left-behind families: a scoping review
- Author
-
Kristel May Gomez-Magdaraog, Claudine Burton-Jeangros, and Yves Jackson
- Subjects
Overseas Filipino Workers ,COVID-19 pandemic ,scoping review ,socioeconomic effects ,responses and recommendations ,Political science - Abstract
Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) are considered bagong bayani, or modern-day heroes, as their remittances have a positive long-term impact on the Philippines economy. The Philippines ranked 10th worldwide in terms of net emigration from 2010 to 2020. The deployment of OFWs declined during the pandemic, and this was estimated to have adverse effects on remittances. As a migrant-sending country, the Philippine government had to deal with the mass of unemployed OFWs stranded in their host countries and organize large-scale repatriation of OFWs. This scoping review aims to assess the existing literature, identify research gaps, and propose future research directions concerning the socio-economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on OFWs and their left-behind families. The results indicate that the impact of the pandemic on OFWs was not uniform. It is evident that OFWs in precarious situations beforehand have become even more vulnerable. The loss of their source of income in the host country and the restrictions on international mobility during the pandemic had significant detrimental effects on their wellbeing and their families left behind, regardless of their income level or type of job. Upon returning to their home country, they often experienced anxiety, depression, discrimination, and difficulty in finding a job. Overall, this scoping review highlights the urgent need for greater recognition and protection of OFWs in times of crisis. It is crucial to address the systemic issues that contribute to their vulnerability and to ensure that they receive adequate support and protection in host countries and the Philippines.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An Evaluation of an Expanded Nutrition and Culinary Education After-School Program for 4th and 5th Graders in Five Diverse Urban Neighborhoods.
- Author
-
Jennings, Thomas, Bukari, Nafisatu, Hendrickson, Mary, Plourde, Hugues, and Frasier, Beccah
- Subjects
NUTRITION education ,AFTER school programs ,NUTRITIONAL assessment ,EDUCATION conferences ,NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
The present study sought to evaluate the effectiveness of program expansion of an afterschool Nutrition and Culinary Education Program with a 79% participation rate. A retrospective matched-pairs analysis was conducted on pre- and post-survey data of all five sites of 284 young participants (and their parents) who took part in a 10-week, 2-hour cooking and educational workshop. The results demonstrate that NCEP's are effective, producing significant positive change in diverse neighborhoods in areas of knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors around food. However, results varied among individual sites. Further study is needed to understand factors, which may influence outcomes between individual sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Socioeconomic Effects of Good Governance Practices in Urban Land Management: The Case of Lega Tafo Lega Dadi and Gelan Towns.
- Author
-
Udessa, Fraol, Adugna, Dagnachew, and Workalemahu, Liku
- Subjects
LAND management ,URBAN poor ,RURAL poor ,URBAN growth ,CITY dwellers ,COMMUNITIES ,CITIES & towns ,QUANTITATIVE research - Abstract
This study's objective is to assess the socioeconomic effects of good governance practices in urban land management in two particular Ethiopian towns. Both qualitative and quantitative research methods were employed to achieve this objective. Questionnaires, interviews, and focus group discussions were used to collect data, and the collected data were analyzed descriptively. According to the study's findings, the poor were hit particularly hard by weak governance in urban land management, since they could not afford to bribe authorities to acquire services or legal protection. Development was hampered by poor governance and corruption in the management of urban land, which raised business risks, decreased investment incentives, and restricted access to financing in the towns. Communities bribed officials to remove limits on land-use planning and to influence the decision to stop the implementation of environmental protection rules. Due to their unregistered land, the majority of suburban inhabitants did not pay property taxes. Similarly, since paying property taxes was seen as a necessary step in towns' regularization process, informal settlers were prohibited from doing so. As a result, residents in urban areas began to construct homes without registering their land and land rights. As a result, after being delimited to the towns, more landowners in peri-urban regions utilized their property for residential purposes and unlawful transactions, while fewer were using it for agricultural purposes. Consequently, due to poor governance in urban land management, land-related socioeconomic development was unable to be fostered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Building a macrosystems ecology framework to identify links between environmental and human health: A random forest modelling approach.
- Author
-
Walls, Felisha N. and McGarvey, Daniel J.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL health ,FOREST health ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,MORTALITY ,SPECIES distribution ,DEATH rate ,FOOD security - Abstract
Anthropogenic activities that degrade natural ecosystems may also impact human health. However, research on the links between human and environmental health has most often been conducted at small scales (e.g. individual cities) and cannot easily be extrapolated to larger scales.We created a macrosystems ecology framework to identify associations between human and environmental health by combining human mortality and socioeconomic data for the conterminous United States with spatially aligned data on the physicochemical characteristics of river basins.Principal component analysis was first used to reduce a list of 596 environmental variables to a subset of 64 environmental covariates, representing six main environmental themes (climate, geology, hydrology, land use, river basin morphology and pollution). Independent, spatially aligned information was then obtained for 12 socioeconomic covariates.Random forest modelling was used to predict age‐adjusted mortality rate as a function of the environmental and socioeconomic covariates. An independent data subset (random 75:25 model building vs. testing split) was also used for model validation. The coefficient of determination between predicted and observed mortality rates was 0.76 for the validation data. Furthermore, model residuals (predicted − observed mortality) were centered near zero and normally distributed (1 SD = 62.26), suggesting high model accuracy and precision.Socioeconomic covariates were consistently the most influential predictors of mortality rate. Smoking, food insecurity, and lack of physical activity were particularly important. However, environmental covariates accounted for 5 of the 10 strongest predictors overall, with air temperature and precipitation being most influential among environmental variables.This proof‐of‐concept study demonstrates the utility of a modelling framework that combines environmental and human health data at macroscales. We suggest that further application of macrosystems ecology tools will improve the capacity to anticipate human health responses to ongoing environmental change. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Unpacking the Land and Socio-Economic Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Rural Kenya.
- Author
-
Wangu, James and Githuku, Fridah
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *RURAL population , *VIRAL transmission , *COVID-19 , *COMMUNITIES , *SOCIAL groups - Abstract
Following its outbreak in late 2019, the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has been reported to have had devastating human health, health systems, and socioeconomic impacts across the globe. Countries in the Global South are known to have been hit harder given the low level of resilience to crises amid high levels of poverty and limited social protection programmes. This includes countries in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Most of the existing studies on the COVID-19 pandemic in SSA, however, have focused on the puzzling nature of the considerably low rate at which the virus spread over the continent, the low level of hospitalisation, and the corresponding low morbidity rate. As such, little focus has been given to the social and economic effects of the pandemic in the local communities. Carried out in two rural communities in Kenya—Kilifi and Murang'a—the present study adopts a case study approach for an in-depth, real-life context and explores the socioeconomic (including land-related) effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the vulnerable rural population and the social group of smallholder farmers. Outcomes of the study show that the local effects of the pandemic are context specific. The findings demonstrate that the pandemic has had far-reaching impact on access to and control over land for some households in the rural communities. It was also accompanied with other negative social and economic effects, including a notable rise in teenage pregnancy, intra-household conflicts, job losses, and businesses closures. Positively, it is also claimed to have contributed to food and nutrition security in some rural regions, following increased availability of nutritious food that could have, otherwise, been sold. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Deniz Yolu Yük Taşımacılığı ve Liman İşletmelerinin Sosyoekonomik Etkilerinin Analizi.
- Author
-
GÜN, Seçkin, KUBAŞ, Ahmet, and ZEREN, Feyyaz
- Subjects
FREIGHT & freightage ,MARITIME shipping ,SAFETY factor in engineering ,ECONOMIC change ,TRANSPORTATION industry - Abstract
Copyright of Balkan & Near Eastern Journal of Social Sciences (BNEJSS) is the property of Balkan & Near Eastern Journal of Social Sciences (BNEJSS) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
12. The Socioeconomic and Psychological Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on People with Multiple Sclerosis in Turkey.
- Author
-
GÜNDÜZ, Tuncay, UZUNKÖPRÜ, Cihat, DEMİR, Serkan, TÜTÜNCÜ, Melih, SEFEROĞLU, Meral, GÜMÜŞ, Haluk, ŞEN, Sedat, GÜNGÖR DOĞAN, İpek, TÜTÜNCÜ, Mesude, SOLAK ÇALIKOĞLU, Yasemin, BECKMANN, Yeşim, SAĞDUYU KOCAMAN, Ayşe, and SİVA, Aksel
- Subjects
- *
MULTIPLE sclerosis diagnosis , *PATIENT aftercare , *SOCIAL media , *FEAR , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DISEASE relapse , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ANXIETY , *FATIGUE (Physiology) , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Introduction: Various restrictions due to the coronavirus infection have affected working life globally. People with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) have several difficulties in social life, patient follow-up, and receiving treatments. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the experiences of pwMS during the COVID-19 pandemic. Method: We developed a 50-question survey aiming to determine fears, anxieties, and the problems experienced by patients regarding their diseases and social lives during the COVID-19 pandemic. The questionnaire was released online via the Turkish MS Society website, local MS societies websites, and social media accounts. Only the answers of the patients who filled out the questionnaire completely were evaluated. Results: In total, 6008 patients took the survey, and 3255 of them completed the questionnaire. Among all, 378 patients (11.6%) were positive for COVID-19. The most common COVID-19-related symptom was fatigue (48.4%). The routine medical follow-up was interrupted in 61.4% and the medication was discontinued in 14% of the patients. Approximately 25% of the patients reported different symptoms related to relapse activity. The main concern of the patients related to the COVID-19 pandemic was the disruption of the health of the ones they loved. Among all the patients, 4.4% lost their jobs. Conclusion: Our data showed that the COVID-19 pandemic strongly affected the working lives of pwMS. Also, the pandemic changed the attitudes of patients and neurologists. Therefore, the long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on disease approach, patient follow-up, social conditions, and working life should be monitored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Efeitos da pandemia do novo coronavírus (Covid-19) no setor turístico da região Nordeste do Brasil.
- Author
-
Simone Guardia, Mabel, da Silva Taveira, Marcelo, and Silva de França, Rosana
- Subjects
MEDICAL tourism ,TOURISM ,TOURISM impact ,COVID-19 pandemic ,FOREIGN news - Abstract
Copyright of Pasos: Revista de Turismo y Patrimonio Cultural is the property of Universidad de La Laguna, Instituto Universitario de Ciencias Politicas y Sociales and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Social and Economic Outcomes of Fisheries Certification: Characterizing Pathways of Change in Canned Fish Markets
- Author
-
Christopher M. Anderson, Amber Himes-Cornell, Cristina Pita, Ashleigh Arton, Margaux Favret, Dan Averill, Stephen Stohs, and Catherine Sarah Longo
- Subjects
ecolabel ,certified sustainable ,environmental certification ,socioeconomic effects ,supply chain ,Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) eco-labeling program provides fisheries a pathway to demonstrate their sustainability by undergoing an environmental certification. Like other standard-setters, the MSC’s ‘theory of change’ presumes that markets use this information to select for sustainable products, providing an incentive for producers to improve their practices and become certified. However, the underlying mechanisms which actually work to link market behavior and participation in the program in different contexts have not been systematically identified. We draw on broad MSC field experience to identify processes that have supported the theory of change in individual fisheries. Then, we develop a broadly applicable rapid assessment protocol, relying on a semi-structured interviews of key informants, to gather systematic evidence for key dynamics within the theory of change: the effects of going through MSC certification on market processes, partnerships in the fishery, and governance. In a pilot test of the protocol, we identify important common and idiosyncratic processes in three canned product fisheries: United States west coast albacore tuna, Brittany sardines, and Portuguese sardines. We find that the harvesters and buyers/processors in these fisheries sought certification primarily to expand or maintain their market share, and that certification was synergistic with stakeholder cooperation. The cases demonstrate how our rapid assessment interviews allow program participants to relate their experience in their own words yet facilitate systematic comparison to identify common mechanisms within the theory of change. We propose its wider application to systematically advance our understanding of social and economic processes that drive of eco-label interventions in different geographies and supply chains around the world.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Socioeconomic Effects of Good Governance Practices in Urban Land Management: The Case of Lega Tafo Lega Dadi and Gelan Towns
- Author
-
Fraol Udessa, Dagnachew Adugna, and Liku Workalemahu
- Subjects
land management ,good governance ,socioeconomic effects ,Agriculture - Abstract
This study’s objective is to assess the socioeconomic effects of good governance practices in urban land management in two particular Ethiopian towns. Both qualitative and quantitative research methods were employed to achieve this objective. Questionnaires, interviews, and focus group discussions were used to collect data, and the collected data were analyzed descriptively. According to the study’s findings, the poor were hit particularly hard by weak governance in urban land management, since they could not afford to bribe authorities to acquire services or legal protection. Development was hampered by poor governance and corruption in the management of urban land, which raised business risks, decreased investment incentives, and restricted access to financing in the towns. Communities bribed officials to remove limits on land-use planning and to influence the decision to stop the implementation of environmental protection rules. Due to their unregistered land, the majority of suburban inhabitants did not pay property taxes. Similarly, since paying property taxes was seen as a necessary step in towns’ regularization process, informal settlers were prohibited from doing so. As a result, residents in urban areas began to construct homes without registering their land and land rights. As a result, after being delimited to the towns, more landowners in peri-urban regions utilized their property for residential purposes and unlawful transactions, while fewer were using it for agricultural purposes. Consequently, due to poor governance in urban land management, land-related socioeconomic development was unable to be fostered.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Socioeconomic effects and the role of public spending decomposition on income mobility: a moderated regression model
- Author
-
Berrittella, Maria
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE COASTAL ENVIRONMENT AND ACTIVITIES AT KO YO, SONGKHLA, THAILAND.
- Author
-
S., SINUTOK, P., CHOTIKARN, and M., YUCHAROEN
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BIOCHEMICAL oxygen demand ,CAREER development ,COMMUNITY organization ,ECOLOGY - Abstract
The Thailand national lockdown caused by the coronavirus pandemic lasted for several months. Ko Yo is one of the tourist attractions in Songkhla province due to its unique culture, environment, and businesses. The lockdown has changed the local lifestyle together with its socioeconomic and environmental impacts. This study aimed to integrally investigate the impacts of the COVID-19 related societal responses on the coastal environment and activities and the adaptive capacity of businesses on Ko Yo Island in Songkhla province. The results showed negative impacts of the COVID-19 on restaurants, homestays, and aquaculture businesses due to the Governmental emergency decrees. Aquaculture was the most affected business. Despite the reduced number of customers and transportation problems, some restaurants and homestays have provided delivery services and fishing areas as novel services available to their customers. The decrease in coastal activities had positively affected some environmental parameters, e.g., total nitrogen, total phosphorus, dissolved oxygen, and biochemical oxygen demand in water. In conclusion, businesses in Ko Yo were vulnerable to the disruption and the COVID-19 related situation. The local government organizations should seek to support the local communities, active businesses, and people in need to increase their adaptive capacities by providing financial support, organizing career development workshops, and coordinating and counseling local people. Short and long terms of emergency measures should be set at upper levels of government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The socioeconomic effects of extreme drought events in northern China on the Ming dynasty in the late fifteenth century.
- Author
-
Han, Jianfu and Yang, Yuda
- Abstract
This paper analyzes reconstructed data on temperature, precipitation, and extreme drought events in the late fifteenth century in Northern China, as well as historical records on population migration, financial crises, military farms, and national decisions during the Ming dynasty. We specifically examine the socio-economic effects of extreme drought events, which led to long-term changes causing the collapse of the Ming dynasty. Our results indicate that the first Cold Valley and the frequent extreme drought events of the Little Ice Age in the late fifteenth century led to a sharp reduction in the military farm system. Extreme droughts caused a large-scale population migration in Northern China and led to the collapse of the tax payment and corvee systems. To cope with the extreme droughts, the local financial reserve was reduced by 51.3%. As a result, local finances became extremely tight. To alleviate fiscal pressures, the court was forced to change the socioeconomic model implemented in the beginning of the Ming dynasty to the corvee equalization method and silver coin tax collection method. These new measures resulted in a decline of the dynasty’s control over households, to the abandonment of military farms, and to reduced control over the country’s social risks. This article explains the mechanism through which climate events led to the collapse of the Ming dynasty. We specifically explore the relationship between socioeconomic transformation and extreme drought in the late fifteenth century in order to better understand the relationship between climate change and social response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. TURISMO, ¿OPCIÓN DE DESARROLLO? UN ANÁLISIS DESDE LA EXPERIENCIA DE MALINALCO, ESTADO DE MÉXICO.
- Author
-
de Verano Chapulín-Carrillo, Jazmín, Zapata-Martelo, Emma, Ayala-Carrillo, María del Rosario, María Pérez-Hernández, Luz, and Gutiérrez-Villalpando, Verónica
- Subjects
- *
RURAL development , *TOURIST attractions , *SERVICE industries , *LIVING conditions , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The international industry has positioned the services sector at the top of the economy and, within it, tourism as a vitalizer for economic growth. In this context, tourism activities are prioritized and promoted as if they had the greatest potential to generate new sources of wealth and employment, to the extent of being used as an alternative for development in rural areas. While in some destinations the boom in tourism has coincided with the advance of its economy, socioeconomic effects it produces in societies where such activities are developed have been underestimated. This situation was analyzed in Malinalco, State of Mexico, a community that over the course of three decades has undergone a touristic process intrinsic to its history. Based on a qualitative methodology, some economic effects that tourism has brought to Malinalco are reviewed; and the results show that, despite the economic spill, tourism has not translated into better living conditions for its population; contrary, the capitalist interest that characterizes it has favored the accumulation of capital by residential tourists and inhabitants with investment power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Why has the caesarean rate increased dramatically in Bangladesh?
- Author
-
Huda, N., Richards, J., Rahman, L., and Syed, S.
- Subjects
- *
CHILDBIRTH at home , *CESAREAN section , *DECISION making , *DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *VESICOVAGINAL fistula , *HEALTH facilities , *HEALTH services accessibility , *PROPRIETARY hospitals , *INTERVIEWING , *MATERNITY nursing , *RESEARCH methodology , *PATIENT-family relations , *MEDICAL care costs , *HEALTH policy , *MOTHERS , *PREGNANCY complications , *PRENATAL care , *PUBLIC hospitals , *REGRESSION analysis , *RURAL conditions , *STATISTICAL sampling , *VAGINA , *QUALITATIVE research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: The objective is to assess the reasoning by families in deciding between a home vs. facility delivery and vaginal vs. caesarean. Study design: The authors selected a convenience sample of 16 villages in Sathkira district in southwest Bangladesh. Evidence was drawn from detailed in‐home post‐delivery interviews with all mothers in these villages who delivered in 2015 or 2016. Methods: Local family health workers and paramedics used a structured questionnaire that enabled gathering of relevant quantitative and qualitative evidence. Mothers' reasons for selection of delivery location and type were categorized, and regression analysis was conducted to assess significance of variables that proxy supply and demand factors. Results: Among 492 completed interviews, 48% were home deliveries, 52% facility deliveries; two‐thirds of facility deliveries in private clinics. Overall, sample caesarean rate is 39%, public hospital rate 53%, private clinic rate 86%. Over half of reasons for home delivery refer to pregnancy without complication or access to trusted birth attendant. Over half of reasons for facility delivery refer to medical complications allegedly precluding home delivery, or requiring home‐to‐facility transfer during labour for reasons not clear to the mother. The decision depends on both 'demand' factors originating with the family (proxied by family income, birth order and education levels) and 'supply' factors originating with obstetric care providers (proxied by number of antenatal visits and variation of caesarean rate by village). In a regression controlling for both demand and supply variables, the above proxy variables are all significant. Implications for nursing and health policy: Bangladesh has inadequate nursing support for vaginal delivery in either home or facility. Hence, physicians frequently recommend that women deliver in a facility (usually a physician's clinic). Physicians are reluctant to hire adequate nurses to attend vaginal deliveries. Hence, families with some discretionary income are increasingly opting for a caesarean over vaginal delivery. Facility deliveries reduce incidence of obstructed labour fistula, but probably contribute to rising incidence of iatrogenic fistula. Reducing caesarean rates requires a large increase in numbers of nurses and midwives, and acceptance by physicians of a broad scope of practice for nurses/midwives in vaginal deliveries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Role of social protection in mitigating the impact of coronavirus disease on household welfare: panel data evidence from Nigeria
- Author
-
Egbetokun, Abiodun, Olofinyehun, Adedayo, Oluwatope, Omolayo, Olotu, Sunday, Ejim-Eze, Emmanuel, Egbetokun, Abiodun, Olofinyehun, Adedayo, Oluwatope, Omolayo, Olotu, Sunday, and Ejim-Eze, Emmanuel
- Abstract
COVID-19 has had huge impacts on households across the world. The economic impact is particularly great in Africa. This paper analyses the role of social protection in mitigating the impact of COVID-19 on household welfare measured in terms of ability to afford food. The results of panel logit regressions on data from 1 925 Nigerian households show that social protection in the form of food or direct cash transfers is associated with a higher probability of households being able to afford the food they need. This positive effect is, however, offset by the increasing intensity of the pandemic. Our results are robust even when using alternative measures of pandemic intensity and controlling for household characteristics. This implies the need for more robust social protection programmes (such as health insurance and employment benefits) that are responsive to household needs, especially in times of crisis.
- Published
- 2023
22. Restoring areas after a radioactive fallout : A multidisciplinary study on decontamination
- Author
-
Rääf, Christopher, Martinsson, Johan, Eriksson, Mats, Ewald, Jens, Javid, Reza G., Hjellström, Martin, Isaksson, Mats, Rasmussen, Joel, Sterner, Thomas, Finck, Robert, Rääf, Christopher, Martinsson, Johan, Eriksson, Mats, Ewald, Jens, Javid, Reza G., Hjellström, Martin, Isaksson, Mats, Rasmussen, Joel, Sterner, Thomas, and Finck, Robert
- Abstract
Land remediation is an important part of restoration measures after a radioactive fallout containing long-lived fission products such as 137Cs. In this multidisciplinary study, we focused on three main issues related to remediation of contaminated urban areas. First, we assessed how much decontamination contributes to reducing resident radiation exposure and how much this reduction depends on the timing of implemented measures. Second, we calculated direct and indirect costs of decontamination in an industrialized country such as Sweden. Finally, in a survey study, we considered reactions of Swedish citizens to being given the hypothetical option of moving to a site decontaminated after radioactive fallout and how this predicted response might influence the design of contingency plans. The main findings are that clean-up operations must be done within the first few years after a fallout to contribute significantly to reducing residual dose. If conducted within 1-2 years, large-scale decontamination can, on average, avert 20-200 manSv per km2 residential area and unit ground deposition of 137Cs (1 MBq). The estimated direct costs (in 2020 purchasing power) would amount to 100 million Euro per km2 decontaminated residential area (comparable to Japanese estimates after the Fukushima accident), generating 39,000 m3 of radioactive waste on average, mainly in the form of 137Cs-contaminated topsoil. In our survey study of 2291 Swedish respondents about their willingness to return to decontaminated homes, women, families with resident children, and high-income earners exhibited more skepticism about returning, even if authorities were to deem it safe. The demographic pattern in attitudes was similar to that found among evacuees in the Fukushima prefecture after 2011. We conclude that predefined ranges of measured 137Cs ground deposition can be used as guidance for rescue leaders in the early post-accident phase in long-term planning for affected areas. This planning should
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Integration of groundwater into China's south-north water transfer strategy.
- Author
-
Yao, Yingying, Zheng, Chunmiao, Andrews, Charles, He, Xin, Zhang, Aijing, and Liu, Jie
- Abstract
Abstract Groundwater supplies fresh water for drinking and irrigation and sustains the health of ecosystems. Although the serious consequences caused by unsustainable depletion of groundwater have been widely reported, restricting pumping in exhausted aquifers requires identifying alternative water sources, determining how much water can be made accessible to avert the groundwater crisis and formulating water allocation regulations to achieve regional water sustainability. It is perceived that groundwater management needs integrated action considering environmental and socioeconomic systems; however, how a coupled socio-environmental system can be captured and quantified, and how this scientific evaluation is elicited and structured in policy making and implementation processes are still unclear. Here, we propose an integrated quantification framework and a revised policy-making procedure after examining the detailed planning for the groundwater pumping control policy as part of China's South-to-North Water Transfer Project and identifying the shortcomings of the policy. This quantification framework represents the iterative feedback loops between environmental and socioeconomic systems and provides both high-resolution and aggregated indications, that serve as instruments to evaluate the change in the water resource system and the rationality of water allocation plans through projections. Furthermore, our study demonstrates that integrated management needs the participation of scientists and the public, particularly in the discussion of formulating policy drafts among central and local stakeholders, which is helpful for sound decision making and coordination among science, policy making and practice. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Inadequacy of China's existing groundwater pumping control policy is identified and summarized. • Framework illuminates the feedback loops between socioeconomic and environmental systems. • Adaptive management needs an increase in scientists' participation for sound decision-making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Stadtentwicklung – die neue Soziale Frage. 'Mietenwahnsinn' und Wohnungsnot als Ergebnis wachsender Ungleichheit
- Author
-
Butterwegge, Christoph
- Subjects
socioeconomic effects ,Social Problems ,rent ,soziale Probleme ,Wohnungspolitik ,Federal Republic of Germany ,Sozialpolitik ,Social Policy ,soziale Ungleichheit ,Sociology & anthropology ,Sociology of Settlements and Housing, Urban Sociology ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,homelessness ,Obdachlosigkeit ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,sozioökonomische Folgen ,social inequality ,Wohnungsmarkt ,housing policy ,Segregation ,Miete ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Siedlungssoziologie, Stadtsoziologie ,ddc:360 ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,housing market ,Soziale Probleme und Sozialdienste ,ddc:300 ,ddc:301 ,Social problems and services - Abstract
Wenn ein Land wie die Bundesrepublik ökonomisch, materiell und kulturell auseinanderdriftet, gehört sein Zerfall in sozialräumlicher Hinsicht zu den brisantesten Folgen. Mit der sich vertiefenden Kluft zwischen Arm und Reich nimmt daher auch die sozialräumliche Ungleichheit in Form der residentiellen Segregation zwangsläufig zu. Einerseits ziehen sich Wohlhabende, Reiche und Hyperreiche teilweise in Luxusquartiere (Gated Communities) hinter hohe Mauern zurück, wo sie häufig von privaten Sicherheitsdiensten bewacht werden; andererseits werden Arbeitslose und Arme wegen steigender Mieten vermehrt aus ihren angestammten Quartieren verdrängt, was zu vermehrter Wohnungs- und Obdachlosigkeit führt. Angehörige der Mittelschicht geraten ebenfalls unter Druck, weil sie etwa nach einem beruflich notwendigen Umzug trotz ihres gesicherten Einkommens die hohe Miete für eine neue Wohnung nicht bezahlen können. Weshalb diese Ungleichheit des Wohnens entstanden und aufgrund der Covid-19-Pandemie noch gewachsen ist, wird im Folgenden genauso behandelt wie die Frage, was die „Ampel“-Koalition aus SPD, Bündnis 90/Die Grünen und FDP dagegen zu tun gedenkt und welche politischen Alternativen existieren.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Análisis exploratorio de los efectos económicos de la constitución de las nuevas regiones en Chile y diagnóstico del caso de la provincia de Ñuble
- Author
-
Roberto Esteban Herrera Cofré and Carlos Inostroza Veloso
- Subjects
Cambio en la DPA ,efectos socio económicos ,nuevos territorios ,DPA change ,socioeconomic effects ,new territories ,Commerce ,HF1-6182 ,Business ,HF5001-6182 - Abstract
Desde el año 2005 se permite la creación de nuevas regiones a través de una ley de “Quórum orgánico constitucional”, así es como surge el interés de diversas zonas geográficas por convertirse en región, siendo los casos más emblemáticos los de Arica, Valdivia y Ñuble, donde sólo las dos primeras provincias lograron convertirse en región en el año 2007. El presente documento de investigación analiza efectos económicos y sociales del cambio de División Política Administrativa (DPA) en las nuevas regiones de Arica y Parinacota y Los Ríos, mediante un análisis estadístico-descriptivo e inferencial a variables relevantes de la Encuesta de Caracterización Socioeconómica (CASEN) desde el año 2000 al 2013, evaluando el “antes y el después” del cambio administrativo. A pesar de que la provincia de Ñuble siempre ha tenido ingresos promedio menores en comparación a las dos nuevas regiones, es estadísticamente significativo el aumento de esta brecha entre los dos periodos de estudio (2000 al 2007 y 2007 al 2013). En el primer periodo la diferencia promedio corresponde a $47 510, la que luego prácticamente se duplica en el periodo en que se crean las dos nuevas regiones ($91 527). The subdivision of the country into new regions was enforced by the Chilean “Constitutional Organic Quorum” law, which was enacted in 2005. The enforcement of this law increased the interest of different geographic areas such as Arica, Valdivia and Ñuble to turn into regions. Nevertheless, only the first two provinces turned into regions in 2007. This paper analyses economic and social effects of the Political and Administrative Division (DPA) of the new regions of “Arica y Parinacota” (i.e., Arica) and “Los Ríos” (i.e., Valdivia). Specifically, we evaluate before-and-after effects of the administrative change by means of descriptive and inferential statistical analysis of relevant variables of the Chilean Socioeconomic Characterization Survey (CASEN), during the period (2000-2013). Although Ñuble province has always had a lower average income in comparison with the two new regions, the gap among them increases significantly between the study periods (i.e., from 2000-2007 to 2007-2013). While in the first period the average difference reached $47 510, this figure is doubled ($91 527) after the creation of the new regions.
- Published
- 2016
26. Socioekonomické důsledky výuky mikroekonomie
- Author
-
Štěpánová, Sára, Červinka, Michal, and Zeynalova, Olesia
- Subjects
socioeconomic effects ,Prisoner's dilemma game ,self-interest ,self-fulfilling assumptions ,rationality ,microeconomics - Abstract
The field of microeconomics has quite strong assumptions of rational and self-interested behaviour on which it builds its mathematical models. As such, it may be presented to the students of microeconomics as a norm and students may then behave more selfish in their decision-making, which would make the assumptions of microeconomics self-fulfilling. This study investigates whether the current teachings of microeconomics promote self-interest. It focuses on the influence that different forms of wording have on decision-making. It further compares students of economics and students of non-economic fields and inspects whether the exposure to microeconomics courses affects the decision-making of students. It replicates the experiment of Buchter (2020) and compares the results. The data was collected through three differently worded versions of an online questionnaire, randomly distributed among the students of the Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University, both from economic and non- economic fields of study. The results showed that wording is the most significant factor for the decision-making of individuals. Field of study or the number of semesters of microeconomics did not have a significant effect on the respondents choices. Year of study had some effect on the decision-making of respondents,...
- Published
- 2023
27. Health financing in times of multiple crises: analysis and recommendation
- Author
-
Christoph, Strupat, Balasubramanian, Pooja, Srigiri, Srinivasa, and Hornidge, Anna-Katharina
- Subjects
health investments ,health financing ,socioeconomic effects ,low- and middle-income countries ,policy options - Abstract
IDOS Policy Brief
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. BİLİŞİM TEKNOLOJİSİNDEKİ GELİŞMENİN SOSYOEKONOMİK ETKİLERİ.
- Author
-
ORHAN, Ayhan and YILMAZ GENÇ, Üyesi Sema
- Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Management & Economics Research is the property of Journal of Management & Economics Research and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Complex effects of natural disasters on protected areas through altering telecouplings.
- Author
-
Jindong Zhang, Connor, Thomas, Hongbo Yang, Zhiyun Ouyang, Shuxin Li, and Jianguo Liu
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL disasters , *PROTECTED area management , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ECOLOGICAL reserves - Abstract
Increasingly, protected areas have been connected with the rest of the world through telecouplings (socioeconomic and environmental interactions over distances) that are essential for their structures and functions. Unfortunately, many of the Earth's protected areas are located in regions with frequent natural disasters that can profoundly affect telecouplings. Although there have been many studies evaluating socioeconomic or ecological effects of natural disasters separately, systematic evaluations of socioeconomic and ecological effects of natural disasters by altering multiple telecouplings have remained rare. With long-term data collected in China's Wolong Nature Reserve for giant pandas (Wolong), we applied the telecoupling framework to assess the effects of the 2008 Wenchuan earthquake on telecouplings that link Wolong with the rest of the world, as well as their subsequent effects on coupled human and natural systems in Wolong. Our results show that the earthquake altered all major components of multiple telecouplings and generated complex socioeconomic and ecological effects in Wolong. Based on these understood effects, we provide suggestions to enhance environmental sustainability and human well-being in Wolong and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Arbeitszeit neu gedacht! Müttererwerbstätigkeit fördern und Zeit für die Familie ermöglichen
- Author
-
Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BIB), Bujard, Martin, Brehm, Uta, Diabaté, Sabine, Himbert, Elisa, Panova, Ralina, Ruckdeschel, Kerstin, Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BIB), Bujard, Martin, Brehm, Uta, Diabaté, Sabine, Himbert, Elisa, Panova, Ralina, and Ruckdeschel, Kerstin
- Abstract
Dem Leitbild vieler junger Menschen nach sind Mütter und Väter erwerbstätig, wobei unterschiedliche Arbeitszeiten im Lebensverlauf und zwischen den Partnern erwünscht sind. Die meisten Frauen wünschen sich in der Phase mit Kleinkindern in Teilzeit zu arbeiten. Die Fürsorge kleiner Kinder nimmt besonders viel Zeit in Anspruch, diese reduziert sich aber mit zunehmendem Alter der Kinder. Mütter bleiben häufig langfristig und oft ungewollt in einer Teilzeitbeschäftigung. Dadurch sind sie ökonomisch abhängig vom Partner und haben ein erhöhtes Risiko von Altersarmut betroffen zu sein. Zudem bleiben viele Beschäftigungspotenziale volkswirtschaftlich ungenutzt. Nach Einführung des Elterngeldes kehren Mütter heute häufiger schon im zweiten Lebensjahr des Kindes in den Beruf zurück. Die Erwerbsarbeitszeit aller Mütter mit minderjährigen Kindern ist seit 2006 um mehr als ein Fünftel angestiegen. Politische Maßnahmen können flexible Erwerbsmodelle für Eltern weiter fördern, die eine phasenweise Reduzierung der Arbeitszeit zugunsten der Familie ermöglichen und dauerhafte berufliche Nachteile durch verbesserte Rückkehrmöglichkeiten in Vollzeit vermeiden helfen.
- Published
- 2022
31. Day care availability and awareness of gendered economic risks: How they shape work and care norms
- Author
-
Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BIB), Büchau, Silke, Philipp, Marie-Fleur, Schober, Pia, Spiess, C. Katharina, Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BIB), Büchau, Silke, Philipp, Marie-Fleur, Schober, Pia, and Spiess, C. Katharina
- Abstract
Family policies not only provide money, time and infrastructure to families, but also convey normative assumptions about what is considered desirable or acceptable in paid work and family care. This study conceptualises and empirically investigates how priming respondents with brief media report-like information on existing day care policy entitlements and the economic consequences of maternal employment interruptions may change personal normative beliefs about parental work-care arrangements. Furthermore, we analyse whether these effects differ between groups of respondents assumed to vary in their degree of affectedness by the information as well as previous knowledge. The theoretical framework builds on the concept of normative policy feedback effects (Soroka and Wlezien, 2010; Gangl and Ziefle, 2015) combined with social norm theory (Bicchieri, 2017) and human cognition theories (Petty and Cacioppo, 1986; Evans and Stanovich, 2013). The study is based on a fully randomized survey experiment in Wave 12 of the German Family Panel (pairfam) and applies linear and ordinal logistic regressions with cluster-robust standard errors to a sample of 5,783 respondents. Our results suggest that priming respondents with information on day care policy and long-term economic risks of maternal employment interruptions increases acceptance of intensive day care use across the full sample and especially for mothers with children below school entry age. It further increases support for longer hours spent in paid work among childless women and mothers with school-aged children. Norms regarding paternal working hours are largely unaffected by the information given in this survey experiment.
- Published
- 2022
32. Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19): Socio-Economic Systems in the Post-Pandemic World; Design Thinking, Strategic Planning, Management, and Public Policy
- Author
-
Klimczuk, Andrzej, Berde, Eva, Dovie, Delali A., Klimczuk-Kochańska, Magdalena, Spinelli, Gabriella, Klimczuk, Andrzej, Berde, Eva, Dovie, Delali A., Klimczuk-Kochańska, Magdalena, and Spinelli, Gabriella
- Abstract
On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization declared a pandemic of the COVID-19 coronavirus disease that was first recognized in China in late 2019. Among the primary effects caused by the pandemic, there was the dissemination of health preventive measures such as physical distancing, travel restrictions, self-isolation, quarantines, and facility closures. This includes the global disruption of socio-economic systems including the postponement or cancellation of various public events (e.g., sporting, cultural, or religious), supply shortages and fears of the same, schools and universities closure, evacuation of foreign citizens, a rise of unemployment, changes in the international aid schemes, misinformation, and incidents of discrimination toward people affected by or suspected of having the COVID-19 disease. The pandemic has brought to the fore unpreparedness in critical areas that require attention, amid prospects and challenges. Moreover, considerable reorganization efforts are required with implications for assets, resources, norms, and value systems. COVID-19 is challenging the concept of globalization and stimulating responses at the levels of local and regional socio-economic systems that lead to the mobilization of assets that have been unrecognized earlier on, such as various forms of economic capital, social capital, cultural capital, human capital, and creative capital. For example, through digital channels, local groups are forming to create schemes of support for physical and mental wellbeing. These emerging exchanges lead to various social and technological innovations by building on skills and assets that are less important in the free-market economy, such as empathy, skills for crafts, making and fixing; locally grown microgreens; and micromanufacturing. Isolation and local living are also making it much harder to ignore the civic responsibilities towards communities, meant as individuals, vulnerable groups, and local businesses. Whilst the pand
- Published
- 2022
33. The human rights impacts of climate change mitigation and adaptation measures
- Author
-
Deutsches Institut für Menschenrechte, Donald, Megan, Deutsches Institut für Menschenrechte, and Donald, Megan
- Abstract
The study examines the human rights impacts of climate mitigation and adaptation measures in specific sectors, such as renewable energy, conservation, transportation, housing and construction. To do so, it draws on a number of case studies from different geographical areas across the Global South and Global North. The study identifies factors that influence or determine human rights impacts and examines mechanisms used to either avoid or mitigate potential human rights impacts from climate adaptation and mitigation measures.
- Published
- 2022
34. Wirtschaft, Arbeit und Leben mit und nach der Corona-Krise
- Author
-
Wannöffel, Manfred, Gensterblum, Yves, Wannöffel, Manfred, and Gensterblum, Yves
- Abstract
Der Sammelband beinhaltet eine interdisziplinäre Analyse von Krisenphänomenen und gesellschaftlichen Herausforderungen durch historische Vergleiche und interdisziplinäre Reflexion, um die tieferliegenden Dynamiken von sozialen und politischen Prozessen infolge der Corona-Pandemie ursächlich zu verstehen. Aus wissenschaftlicher Perspektive ergeben sich vielfältige Fragen zu strukturellen Herausforderungen in der Wirtschafts-, Arbeits- und Lebenswelt, die im Rahmen eines inter- und transdisziplinären Dialoges zwischen Historiker:innen, Ökonom:innen, Psycholog:innen und Soziolog:innen erörtert werden., This anthology contains an interdisciplinary analysis of crisis phenomena and social challenges through historical comparisons and interdisciplinary reflection in order to causally understand the deeper dynamics of social and political processes as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. From an academic perspective, a variety of questions arise about structural challenges in the economic, working and living worlds, which are discussed here within the framework of an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary dialogue between historians, economists, psychologists and sociologists.
- Published
- 2022
35. Projekt 'Finanzielle Auswirkungen einer Tumorerkrankung (FIAT)': Kognitiver Pretest
- Author
-
GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Lenzner, Timo, Schick, Lukas, Hadler, Patricia, Steins, Patricia, Behnert, Jan, GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Lenzner, Timo, Schick, Lukas, Hadler, Patricia, Steins, Patricia, and Behnert, Jan
- Published
- 2022
36. Regional socio-economic aspects in the field of coal mining
- Author
-
Irimie, Sabina, Popescu, Gloria, Irimie, Sabina, and Popescu, Gloria
- Abstract
Over time, the discovery of the deposit, the exploitation and processing of coal has led to the development and prosperity of many areas called “coal regions”. In the last decades we have witnessed the closing process of many exploitation capacities (underground mines or open pit quarries) with complex socio-economic and even cultural impact in the coal region and on the continent. Debates for or against “coal” with related arguments, policies, strategies and measures at global, regional, national and local level integrate holistically from the “resource” issue to large dynamic systems (energy, climate, urbanism). The relationship between the coal industry and the socio-economic aspects is multifaceted and not yet fully explored. Our paper proposes a statistically documented research on regional development using representative socio-economic indicators. The paper is aiming to present the current socio-economic state in Jiu Valley micro-region, as a result of the structural transformations / changes in the coal industry of Romania’s largest hard coal-fired coal basin.
- Published
- 2022
37. Using input–output methods to assess the effects of fishing and aquaculture on a regional economy: The case of Galicia, Spain.
- Author
-
Garza-Gil, Ma Dolores, Surís-Regueiro, Juan C., and Varela-Lafuente, Manuel M.
- Subjects
AQUACULTURE ,FISHING -- Economic aspects ,JOB creation ,REGIONAL economics ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper uses an input–output model to quantify the socioeconomic impact of fishing and aquaculture on Galicia, one of Spain's most important maritime regions. Results indicate that the carryover effects of these production activities are important for Galicia's economy because they contribute not only to job creation but also to possibilities for obtaining income in other economic sectors. These sectors’ combined production in 2013 was almost a million euros, and that production was estimated to account for nearly 2% of the regional economy's value added and for more than 17,000 full-time jobs. Together these contributions amounted to some €1.7 billion in production and €975 million in value added to other Galician economic activities. At the same time, fishing and aquaculture were responsible for creating the equivalent of more than 14,000 full-time jobs in other economic activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Nations Resort to a Redistribution to Rescue the Western Model for the Post-Pandemic World: An EU and Canadian Approach
- Author
-
Tatjana Muravska and Denis Dyomkin
- Subjects
Baltic States ,health crisis ,Canada ,socioeconomic effects ,Economics ,Wirtschaftsentwicklung ,COVID-19 ,Health Crisis ,integration ,Sozialpolitik ,Epidemie ,Krisenmanagement ,Social Policy ,epidemic ,socio-economic crisis ,Wohlfahrtsstaat ,well-being ,Solidarität ,ddc:330 ,solidarity ,europäische Integration ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,Political science ,crisis management (econ., pol.) ,economic development (on national level) ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,sozioökonomische Folgen ,Wirtschaft ,health policy ,Baltikum ,Kanada ,Wirtschaftspolitik ,ddc:300 ,Economic Policy ,Gesundheitspolitik ,EU ,European integration ,welfare state - Abstract
The novel coronavirus pandemic has triggered an economic slowdown worldwide, aggravating those steadily accumulated inequalities in income and wealth redistribution. Western-type capitalism, international cooperation, and European integration have found themselves at risk. This article points out the resemblances and dissimilarities in policies combating therecessions of 2008 and 2020 on both sides of the Atlantic, focusing specifically on the EU and Canada. It assesses the rising popularity of the welfarestate concept applied both to individuals and entire businesses deemed essential for democracy, notably in the EU, for which the protection of citizens’ well-being and solidarity values are at the core of bloc integration. Conceptually confl icting solutions for those crises refl ect a profound shift in policy making, reinforcing state interventions vs the neoliberal approach and intensifying discussions on a universal basic income as a tool in redressing socio-economic inequalities. This paper highlights the need for a trans-disciplinary approach to benefi t policy making.
- Published
- 2021
39. Mangroves and brackishwater pond culture in the Philippines
- Author
-
Primavera, J. Honculada, Dumont, H. J., editor, Wong, Yuk-Shan, editor, and Tam, Nora F. Y., editor
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Projekt ���Finanzielle Auswirkungen einer Tumorerkrankung��� (FIAT)
- Author
-
Lenzner, Timo, Schick, Lukas, Hadler, Patricia, Steins, Patricia, Behnert, Jan, and GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
- Subjects
Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften ,financial situation ,measurement instrument ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,Krebs ,sozioökonomische Folgen ,socioeconomic effects ,questionnaire ,illness ,Fragebogen ,data capture ,Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis, Statistical Methods, Computer Methods ,finanzielle Situation ,pretest ,ddc:300 ,Messinstrument ,cancer ,Krankheit ,Datengewinnung ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The human rights impacts of climate change mitigation and adaptation measures
- Author
-
Donald, Megan and Deutsches Institut für Menschenrechte
- Subjects
sozioökonomische Folgen ,socioeconomic effects ,Energiepolitik ,climate protection ,climate policy ,human rights ,Recht ,Klimapolitik ,ddc:340 ,Menschenrechte ,Klimaschutz ,Law ,energy policy - Abstract
The study examines the human rights impacts of climate mitigation and adaptation measures in specific sectors, such as renewable energy, conservation, transportation, housing and construction. To do so, it draws on a number of case studies from different geographical areas across the Global South and Global North. The study identifies factors that influence or determine human rights impacts and examines mechanisms used to either avoid or mitigate potential human rights impacts from climate adaptation and mitigation measures.
- Published
- 2022
42. Day care availability and awareness of gendered economic risks: How they shape work and care norms
- Author
-
Büchau, Silke, Philipp, Marie-Fleur, Schober, Pia, Spiess, C. Katharina, and Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (BIB)
- Subjects
Familiensoziologie, Sexualsoziologie ,Erwerbsbeteiligung ,family policy ,division of labor ,socioeconomic effects ,day care (for children) ,Kinderbetreuung ,Federal Republic of Germany ,work-family balance ,Sociology & anthropology ,10.4232/pairfam.5678.12.0.0) [German Family Panel (pairfam), wave 12 (doi] ,gender-specific factors ,career break ,Berufsunterbrechung ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,Elternschaft ,child care ,parenthood ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,sozioökonomische Folgen ,Tagesbetreuung ,Arbeitsteilung ,Bundesrepublik Deutschland ,Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,labor force participation ,Familienpolitik ,geschlechtsspezifische Faktoren ,Familie-Beruf ,ddc:300 ,Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies ,Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior ,ddc:301 - Abstract
Family policies not only provide money, time and infrastructure to families, but also convey normative assumptions about what is considered desirable or acceptable in paid work and family care. This study conceptualises and empirically investigates how priming respondents with brief media report-like information on existing day care policy entitlements and the economic consequences of maternal employment interruptions may change personal normative beliefs about parental work-care arrangements. Furthermore, we analyse whether these effects differ between groups of respondents assumed to vary in their degree of affectedness by the information as well as previous knowledge. The theoretical framework builds on the concept of normative policy feedback effects (Soroka and Wlezien, 2010; Gangl and Ziefle, 2015) combined with social norm theory (Bicchieri, 2017) and human cognition theories (Petty and Cacioppo, 1986; Evans and Stanovich, 2013). The study is based on a fully randomized survey experiment in Wave 12 of the German Family Panel (pairfam) and applies linear and ordinal logistic regressions with cluster-robust standard errors to a sample of 5,783 respondents. Our results suggest that priming respondents with information on day care policy and long-term economic risks of maternal employment interruptions increases acceptance of intensive day care use across the full sample and especially for mothers with children below school entry age. It further increases support for longer hours spent in paid work among childless women and mothers with school-aged children. Norms regarding paternal working hours are largely unaffected by the information given in this survey experiment.
- Published
- 2022
43. Effects of Circularity Interventions in the European Plastic Packaging Sector.
- Author
-
Cimpan C, Bjelle EL, Budzinski M, Wood R, and Strømman AH
- Subjects
- Product Packaging, Environment, United Kingdom, Recycling, Plastics, Waste Management
- Abstract
Low levels of plastics circularity today reflect major challenges for the sector to reduce environmental impacts and a need for wider systemic change. In this work, we investigated the potential for climate and socioeconomic benefits of circular economy (CE) interventions in the plastic packaging system. By means of a mixed-unit input-output (IO) model, we performed a comparative scenario analysis for the development of demand and waste management up to 2030 within the EU-28 (EU27 + United Kingdom). We modeled the development of material flows and assessed the effects of both demand-side and end-of-life interventions. Different levels of ambition toward 2030 based on EU circular economy strategies were tested. Results showed that on reaching high levels of circularity, between 14 and 22 Mt CO
2 -eq/year could be reduced by 2030 (20-30% of the total sector impact in 2018) compared to business-as-usual. Demand change (e.g., by decreasing product packaging intensities) showed similar emission-saving potential as achieving the current recycling target of 55%, which emphasizes the role of demand-side actions. Most scenarios displayed moderate employment gains and potential economic losses, pertaining to both direct and indirect activity shifts in the economy. While considering model limitations, the approach is useful in indicating potential first-order effects of system changes.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Swiss Parks of National Importance as model regions of sustainable development – An economic success story for farmers?
- Author
-
Ritzel, Christian, Hoop, Daniel, Portmann, Marco, Wallner, Astrid, and Mack, Gabriele
- Subjects
NATIONAL parks & reserves ,ECONOMIC indicators ,NATURE reserves ,SUSTAINABLE development ,BIOSPHERE reserves - Abstract
Evidence on the socioeconomic effects of the protected area status of affected regions is mixed. While some studies highlight positive outcomes for these regions, others point in the opposite direction. Consequently, this study aimed to add to the discourse on whether protected area status fosters the socioeconomic development of these regions or not. The study focuses on the agricultural sector in protected areas, because this sector is of particular importance for local communes in these regions. Our study aimed to investigate whether the status Swiss Park of National Importance (henceforth park) positively or negatively influenced economic indicators of local farms (i.e., direct payments, income, and revenues). Specifically, the study answers the following question: How would economic farm indicators have developed if the territory had not gained park status? Thus, the study compared the economic indicators of farms located in a park with economic indicators of farms from neighboring regions outside the park. The analyses focused on the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Biosphere Reserve Entlebuch and the Nature Park Gantrisch as case study regions. The empirical findings revealed that gaining the park status had neither positive nor negative significant effects on income of farms inside a park compared to similar farms outside. However, results also showed that gaining the park status had positive rather than negative effects on further economic indicators such as direct payments and revenues. • We estimated the effects of protected area status on economic indicators of farms. • We compared farms located in a designated park with farms in neighboring regions. • Protected area status had no negative effect on economic indicators of farms inside park. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Corona und die Arbeitswelt der Zukunft: von der gesellschaftlichen (Un-)Sichtbarkeit des Leidens an der Pandemie
- Author
-
Filipič, Ursula, Schönauer, Annika, Arbeiterkammer Wien, Fessler, Agnes, Holst, Hajo, Niehoff, Steffen, Filipič, Ursula, Schönauer, Annika, Arbeiterkammer Wien, Fessler, Agnes, Holst, Hajo, and Niehoff, Steffen
- Abstract
Der Beitrag beschäftigt sich anhand des in Deutschland durchgeführten Arbeitswelt-Monitors "Arbeiten in der Corona-Krise" mit den Arbeitserfahrungen verschiedener Erwerbsklassen in der Pandemie. Die Befunde gelten für den deutschen Fall. Allerdings spricht einiges dafür, dass trotz der Unterschiede der Wirtschaftsstruktur und im politischen Umgang mit COVID-19 in Österreich vergleichbare Ungleichheitsdynamiken zu beobachten sind. Drei Befunde sind besonders hervorzuheben: COVID-19 verstärkt bestehende Klassenungleichheiten: Die subjektiven gesundheitlichen Risiken, die wirtschaftlichen Lasten und der Zugang zum mobilen Arbeiten weisen ausgeprägte vertikale und horizontale Klassenungleichheiten auf. In den unteren Klassen bilden die Benachteiligung gegenüber den jeweiligen oberen Klassen, verbreitete Ohnmacht, auch in Pandemiezeiten kaum Einfluss auf die eigene Arbeitssituation nehmen zu können, und gesellschaftliche Unsichtbarkeit der eigenen Erfahrungen einen gemeinsamen Erfahrungshorizont. Corona-Erfahrungen der unteren Klassen sind fragmentiert: Dienstleistende erleben COVID-19 häufiger als Gesundheitsgefährdung, Produktionsarbeitende und Kleingewerbetreibende als Wirtschaftskrise und die Bürokräfte als Treiber mobilen Arbeitens. Die Fragmentierung des Erlebens der Pandemie erschwert Solidarisierungsprozesse unter den unteren Klassen., This paper deals with the work experiences of diferent social classes during the pandemic, based on the Work Monitor "Working in Corona Crisis" conducted in Germany. The fndings apply to the German situation. However, evidence suggests that, despite diferences in the countries' economic structures and the political handling of Covid-19, the results on the pandemic's class dynamics are to some degree transferable to Austria. Three fndings are particularly noteworthy: Covid-19 reinforces existing class inequalities: subjective health risks, economic burdens, and access to mobile work show pronounced vertical and horizontal class inequalities. The lower classes share a common set of experiences, including the disadvantages, compared to the respective upper classes, the powerlessness to exert infuence on their own work situations even in times of pandemic, and the societal invisibility of their own experiences. At the same time, the Corona experiences of the lower classes are fragmented. This fragmentation of the experience of the pandemic impedes the emergence of solidarity among the lower classes.
- Published
- 2021
46. COVID-19 als 'grosser Ungleichmacher': die Krise der Arbeit und ihre globalen sozialen Folgen
- Author
-
Filipič, Ursula, Schönauer, Annika, Arbeiterkammer Wien, Schlögl, Lukas, Filipič, Ursula, Schönauer, Annika, Arbeiterkammer Wien, and Schlögl, Lukas
- Abstract
Die COVID-19-Pandemie löste eine Krise der Erwerbsarbeit aus. Laut Schätzungen der ILO reduzierten sich im zweiten Quartal 2020 die globalen Arbeitsstunden um 14 %; in vielen Ländern wurde die Schließung aller bis auf "systemerhaltende" Arbeitsplätze angeordnet. Die Folge ist eine Verschlechterung des Lebensstandards für viele Betroffene besonders in Ländern des Globalen Südens mit schwach ausgeprägter Sozialstaatlichkeit. Begleitet wird diese Krise der Arbeit von einer Verschiebung im Verhältnis von Arbeit und Technologie. Die Pandemie führte zu "Hyper-Digitalisierung" und zu neuen, technologisch verstärkten sozialen Ungleichheiten. Wesentliche Erkenntnisse dieses Beitrags sind: Die Möglichkeit von Telearbeit bleibt aufgrund unterschiedlicher technologischer Kapazitäten und Beschäftigungsstrukturen global sehr ungleich verteilt. Beschäftigte in Entwicklungsländern sind nicht nur mit einer Wirtschaftsrezession und steigender Armut, sondern längerfristig mit Herausforderungen durch die Rückholung ausgelagerter Produktion konfrontiert. Politisch stehen aktuell Maßnahmen der Unternehmensstützung und des Arbeitsschutzes im Zentrum; es bedürfte aber stärkerer Maßnahmen der internationalen Solidarität., The Covid-19 pandemic has triggered a crisis in gainful employment. According to estimates from the ILO, global working hours fell by an unprecedented 14% in the second quarter of 2020; with many countries ordering the closure of all but "essential service" businesses. As a result, standards of living have dropped for many of those affected, particularly those countries in the Global South with weak welfare states. This has led to a historic reversal of the trend in poverty reduction. Furthermore, the relationship between work and technology has shifted. The pandemic has led to "hyper-digitalization" and new technologically enhanced inequalities. Key findings of this paper are: Due to differences globally in technological capacities and employment structures, the number of jobs suitable for telework remains unequally distributed. Employees in developing countries not only face an economic downturn and rising poverty, but also long-term challenges from a potential return to outsourced production to high-income countries. Economic stimulation, support of businesses and job protection are the current political measures being taken, but there is also a need for stronger measures of international solidarity.
- Published
- 2021
47. Transnationaler Bergbau und lokale Politik: Politische Einflussnahme im Kontext des industriellen Goldbergbaus in Argentinien
- Author
-
Bechtum, Alexandra and Bechtum, Alexandra
- Abstract
Bergbau, soziale Konflikte und Umweltkatastrophen - seit den 1990er Jahren erlebt Lateinamerika einen historischen Rohstoffboom. Welche Rolle spielen die Betreiber der Minen in den Abbauregionen? Wie schaffen sie Akzeptanz unter der lokalen Bevölkerung? Und welche politischen Auswirkungen zieht dies nach sich? Die Autorin analysiert das Handeln transnationaler Bergbauunternehmen in Argentinien und hinterfragt kritisch die sozial- und infrastrukturpolitischen Maßnahmen, die Bergbauunternehmen in den Abbauregionen industrieller Goldminen implementieren. Dabei stellt sie Fragen von Demokratie und Entwicklung in den Fokus.
- Published
- 2021
48. Local Extremes of Selected Industry 4.0 Indicators in the European Space - Structure for Autonomous Systems
- Author
-
Botlíková, Milena, Botlík, Josef, Botlíková, Milena, and Botlík, Josef
- Abstract
In the past, the social and economic impacts of industrial revolutions have been clearly identified. The current Fourth Industrial Revolution (Industry 4.0) is characterized by robotization, digitization, and automation. This will transform the production processes, but also the services or financial markets. Specific groups of people and activities may be replaced by new information technologies. Changes represent an extreme risk of economic instability and social change. The authors described available published sources and selected a group of indicators related to Industry 4.0. The indicators were divided into five groups and summarized by negative or positive impact. The indicators were analyzed by precedence analysis. Extremes in the geographical dislocation of factor values were found. Furthermore, spatial dependencies in the distribution of these extremes were found by calculating multiple (long) precedencies. European countries were classified according to individual groups of indicators. The results were compared with the real values of the indicators. The indicated extremes and their distribution will allow to predict changes in the behavior of the population given by changes in the socio-economic environment. The behavior of the population can be described by the behavior of autonomous systems on selected infrastructure. The paper presents research related to the creation of a multiagent model for the prediction of spatial changes in population distribution induced by Industry 4.0.
- Published
- 2021
49. Sur l'impact socio-économique des pandémies en Afrique: Leçons tirées du COVID-19, de la trypanosomiase, du VIH, de la fièvre jaune, du choléra
- Author
-
Kohnert, Dirk and Kohnert, Dirk
- Abstract
Throughout history, nothing has killed more human beings than infectious diseases. Although, death rates from pandemics dropped globally by about 0.8 % per year, all the way through the 20th century, the number of new infectious diseases like Sars, HIV and Covid-19 increased by nearly fourfold over the past century. In Africa, there were reported a total of 4,522,489 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 119,816 death, as of 23 April 2021. The pandemic impacted seriously on the economic and social sectors in almost all African countries. It is threatening to push up to 58 m people into extreme poverty. However, apart from the African poor, the Covid pandemic also affects the growing African middle class, i.e. about 170 million out of Africa's 1.3 billion people currently classified as middle class. Nearly eight million of may be thrust into poverty because of the coronavirus and its economic aftermath. This setback will be felt for decades to come. Moreover, in recent African History also other infectouse diseases like the 1896-1906 Congo Basin Trypanosomiasis with a death-toll of over 500.000 as well as the 1900-1920 Uganda African trypanosomiasis epidemic with 200,000-300,000 death had tremendous negative impact on Africa's societies and economies. Actually, other pandemics, like Yellow Fever, Cholera, Meningitis and Measles - not to mention Malaria - contributed to long-lasting economic downturns and seriously affect the social wellbeing for decades., Au cours de l'histoire, rien n'a tué plus d'êtres humains que les maladies infectieuses et la fièvre hémorragique. Bien que les taux de mortalité dus aux pandémies aient chuté de près de 1 % par an dans le monde, environ 0,8 % par an, tout au long du XXe siècle, le nombre de nouvelles maladies infectieuses comme le Sars, le VIH et le Covid-19 a presque quadruplé par rapport au passé. En Afrique, on a signalé un total de 4 522 489 cas confirmés de COVID-19 et 119 816 décès, au 23 avril 2021. La pandémie a eu de graves répercussions sur les secteurs économique et social dans presque tous les pays africains. Il menace de pousser jusqu'à 58 millions de personnes dans l'extrême pauvreté. Cependant, outre les Africains pauvres, la pandémie de Covid affecte également la classe moyenne africaine en pleine croissance, c'est-à-dire environ 170 millions sur les 1,3 milliard d'Africains actuellement classés dans la classe moyenne. Près de huit millions d'entre eux pourraient être plongés dans la pauvreté à cause du coronavirus et de ses conséquences économiques. Ce revers se fera sentir pendant des décennies. En outre, dans l'histoire récente de l'Afrique, d'autres maladies infectieuses comme la trypanosomiase du bassin du Congo de 1896 à 1906 avec un nombre des morts de plus de 500 000 ainsi que l'épidémie de trypanosomose africaine en Ouganda de 1900 à 1920 avec 200 000 à 300 000 décès ont eu un impact négatif considérable sur les sociétés et économies africaines. En fait, d'autres pandémies, comme la fièvre jaune, le choléra, la méningite et la rougeole-sans parler du paludisme-ont contribué à des ralentissements économiques durables et affectent gravement le bien-être social pendant des décennies., Im Laufe der Geschichte hat nichts mehr Menschen getötet als Infektionskrankheiten. Obwohl die Sterblichkeitsrate durch Pandemien im Laufe des 20. Jahrhunderts weltweit um etwa 0,8% pro Jahr gesunken ist, hat sich die Zahl der neuen Infektionskrankheiten wie Sars, HIV und Covid-19 im vergangenen Jahrhundert fast vervierfacht. In Afrika wurden zum 23. April 2021 insgesamt 4.522.489 bestätigte COVID-19-Fälle und 119.816 Todesfälle gemeldet. Die Pandemie hatte schwerwiegende Auswirkungen auf den wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Sektor in fast allen afrikanischen Ländern. Sie droht, bis zu 58 Millionen Menschen in extreme Armut zu treiben. Abgesehen von den afrikanischen Armen betrifft die Covid-Pandemie jedoch auch die wachsende afrikanische Mittelschicht, d. h. etwa 170 Millionen der 1,3 Milliarden Menschen in Afrika, die derzeit als Mittelschicht eingestuft sind. Fast acht Millionen von ihnen könnten aufgrund des Coronavirus und seiner wirtschaftlichen Folgen in Armut geraten. Dieser Rückschlag wird noch Jahrzehnte zu spüren sein. Darüber hinaus hatten in der jüngeren afrikanischen Geschichte auch andere Infektionskrankheiten wie die Trypanosomiasis (Schlafkrankheit) im Kongobecken von 1896-1906 mit einer Zahl von über 500.000 Todesopfern sowie die Trypanosomiasis-Epidemie in Uganda von 1900-1920 mit 200.000-300.000 Todesfällen enorme negative Auswirkungen auf die afrikanischen Gesellschaften und Volkswirtschaften. Tatsächlich haben andere Pandemien wie Gelbfieber, Cholera, Meningitis und Masern - ganz zu schweigen von Malaria - zu lang anhaltenden wirtschaftlichen Abschwüngen beigetragen und das soziale Wohlbefinden über Jahrzehnte hinweg ernsthaft beeinträchtigt.
- Published
- 2021
50. The effect of COVID-19 on labour migration in the CIS
- Author
-
Ryazantsev, Sergey V., Molodikova, Irina N., Bragin, Alexey D., Ryazantsev, Sergey V., Molodikova, Irina N., and Bragin, Alexey D.
- Abstract
This study responds to the need for measures to mitigate the effects of national actions to slow the spread of COVID-19. National responses are dynamic processes and thus an elusive, albeit important, object of study. The governments of most CIS countries acted promptly and decisively in countering the pandemic. The comprehensive measures have had a serious impact on citizens’ mobility and employment situation. Among the affected are millions of migrants working in the CIS. This article offers a comparative analysis, followed by synthesis, of the negative effects of the COVID-19 pandemic as seen through the prism of employment and the situation of migrant workers in the CIS. Another focus is the restriction and support measures and how they have affected migrants. A range of qualitative and quantitative data was collated on the situation of migrant workers during COVID-19 restriction in the Russian Federation and across the CIS. The findings suggest that the lack of international coordination in tackling COVID-19 has complicated the situation of migrant workers, who suffer from the closure of borders and the absence of adequate social support. The article explores problems faced by migrant workers in the current crisis and proposes measures to alleviate them.
- Published
- 2021
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.